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Mohamed N. Rahaman

Researcher at Missouri University of Science and Technology

Publications -  271
Citations -  16149

Mohamed N. Rahaman is an academic researcher from Missouri University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bioactive glass & Sintering. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 270 publications receiving 14283 citations. Previous affiliations of Mohamed N. Rahaman include Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory & Kyoto Institute of Technology.

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Bioactive glass in tissue engineering

TL;DR: Recent work has shown the ability of bioactive glass to promote angiogenesis, which is critical to numerous applications in tissue regeneration, such as neovascularization for bone regeneration and the healing of soft tissue wounds.
Book

Ceramic Processing and Sintering

TL;DR: Ceramic fabrication processes -an introductory overview synthesis of powders powder characterization science of colloidal processing sol-gel processing powder consolidation and forming of ceramics sintering of ceramic materials.
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Bioactive glass scaffolds for bone tissue engineering: state of the art and future perspectives

TL;DR: The review reveals the fact that mechanical strength is not a real limiting factor in the use of bioactive glass scaffolds for bone repair, an observation not often recognized by most researchers and clinicians.
Book

Sintering of Ceramics

TL;DR: Sintering of Ceramics: Fundamentals The Sintering process driving force for sintering Defects in Crystalline Solids Diffusion in Ionic Crystals: Ambipolar Diffusion Solid-State and Viscous Sinterings Mechanisms of SinterING Effects of Grain Boundaries Theoretical Analysis of SIntering Herring's Scaling Law Analytical Models Numerical Simulation of SINTERing Phenomenological Sinter-ing Equations Sintered Diagrams Sinterouring Diagram as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetics and mechanisms of the conversion of silicate (45S5), borate, and borosilicate glasses to hydroxyapatite in dilute phosphate solutions.

TL;DR: The kinetics and mechanisms of the conversion process of the four glasses to HA are compared and used to develop a model for the process, which shows a more rapid conversion of the glass to HA and a lower pH value of the phosphate solution.